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MUL Mulberry Group Plc

80.00
0.00 (0.00%)
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Mulberry Group Plc LSE:MUL London Ordinary Share GB0006094303 ORD 5P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.00 0.00% 80.00 75.00 85.00 85.00 80.00 80.00 2,860 08:00:09
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Apparel & Accessories, Nec 152.84M -33.51M -0.5577 -1.43 48.06M
Mulberry Group Plc is listed in the Apparel & Accessories sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker MUL. The last closing price for Mulberry was 80p. Over the last year, Mulberry shares have traded in a share price range of 80.00p to 140.00p.

Mulberry currently has 60,077,458 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Mulberry is £48.06 million. Mulberry has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -1.43.

Mulberry Share Discussion Threads

Showing 1051 to 1069 of 1075 messages
Chat Pages: 43  42  41  40  39  38  37  36  35  34  33  32  Older
DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
06/5/2025
16:55:44
Last year the Trading Update was on 01.05.2024 - will there be one soon or will they just drag it out until the result months down the line (if the last that long imo)because trading must be dire bearung in mind all the problens going on with the luxury brands.

DYOR

clocktower
17/4/2025
15:43:37
Due for a full year update in the next week or so before results normally released in June.

I am only expected more bad news from MUL but will Mike try stepping in again?

clocktower
03/4/2025
16:25:26
The 10% tax in the USA is bound to hit the sales in all the company's now owned US stores - they rally cooked their goose when they took full ownership of the Swedish and American outlets in 2023/24.

Back to 50p when we see results imo

DYOR

clocktower
04/3/2025
12:56:32
Trade wars are likely to bring an end to possible recovery imo.

Mike might yet get his hands on this for less than he was going to pay I assume.

clocktower
18/12/2024
18:13:25
The company survival is on a knife edge, as sales slump, and along with the fall in sales the underlying rents and staffing costs just continue to rise.

Mistake after mistake, buying out their partners at the wrong time, left them with greater liabilities, rents that would have remained with the former partners, are now the company’s along with lease liabilities.

As sales fall, the cost of servicing the overseas shops increases substantially.

Of course the new CEO has got to come out with positive views about the future with the expected caveats that he can blame if/when it all goes pear shaped.


Of course online sales as a percentage increased as shop sales fall but that is not much of a positive, if you break down the actual numbers.

clocktower
19/11/2024
11:55:22
2*
Mulberry posted a pretty woeful set of FY numbers this morning, ones which prompted new CEO Andrea Baldo to note ” "Though I've only been in the role of CEO for under three months, the first half results illustrate the clear need to reprioritise and rebuild the business.” Performance was bad. Group revenue was down 19% to £56.1m with UK retail sales down 14% to £31.3m...

...from WealthOracle

wealthoracle.co.uk/detailed-result-full/MUL/994

martinmc123
19/11/2024
09:56:51
Is Mulberry really worth a fig now - costs overtaking sales, they have fallen from great hights to be rolling around in the gutter.

They have done everything wrong over the past three/four years - buying out partners, over pricing their goods, and jumping up above their station, after all they are just bag makers and they thought they were more.

If UK retailers do sell their stock of bags at Christmas I doubt if they will be replacingt them, as Mulberry like a lot of other firms, try going over their heads and selling directly, without benefits to those that display their goods in stores.

Will one of the Big Luxury Brands even bother now?

In fact the first mistake they make in the 90's was opening a store on Bond Street and competing with your retailers is never a good odea.

clocktower
23/10/2024
10:37:52
The majority owners have the whip hand until such time as it can be proved that they are abusing minority holders.

By not advising MA of the intended raise at £1 or discussing it with someone that owned 36% of the business was the first thing that supports the allegation of acting against minority holders interests.

I believe no matter what (bar a legal case) they have no intention of selling to MA at any sensible price.

I guess they have made other plans and those may not have included any current minor holders.

Does the major holder sit as a shadow on the board or at the meetings?

I have seen this occur before elsewhere, and the board responded that they do take take part, just. listen. Then the regulators would do nothing about it, even when it was put into receivership - but the company was then sold to a director.

clocktower
22/10/2024
11:31:30
Largest shareholder happy to raise new equity at £1. Second-largest indicatively offering £1.50 to purchase the company. Board stuck because it thinks it knows the largest shareholder (which clearly has a blocking vote in takeover terms) won't accept £1.50 and so the offer isn't "tenable".

Isn't the obvious answer for the board to insist on a formal sale process to see what the company might be worth to a genuine third party? The problem would be how to prevent this simply being seen as a stalking horse process to work out how much one of the 2 interested shareholders would have to pay to buy the other out. Ideally you'd have both major shareholders agree in principle to sell to the highest bidder if a price can be agreed above a certain level, with the sale process run as close to arms length as can be managed reporting to an independent director - but is there anything in applicable regulations that can facilitate this sort of outcome?

1gw
16/10/2024
09:24:55
From Citywire yesterday.
Handbags at Mulberry’s future over Frasers’ bid, says Hargreaves

The latest bid by Frasers (FRAS) for luxury handbag group Mulberry (MUL) has been rejected but Hargreaves Lansdown says there are hopes for a higher offer.

AIM-listed Mulberry turned down Fraser’s latest 150p per share offer as Challice, its largest 56% shareholder, refused to sell.

‘Words of frustration have been pumped out from both sides,’ said analyst Susannah Streeter.

‘Frasers Group has clearly lost so much faith in the current direction of the company that it’s fearful of collapse and has warned it does not want to see another Debenhams-style scenario play out.

‘But Challice is also clearly exasperated by the relentless focus, wanting to give the new chief executive Andrea Baldo a chance to bed in and help revive the brand’s fortune.’

An excited market pushed Mulberry shares up 11.5%, or 13p, at 125.5p today, although they are still down 24% this year.

aishah
14/10/2024
12:38:26
From day one, the board accepted dispicably, not even advising such a large shareholder of their intentions, but they would have done so with the controlling one.
clocktower
14/10/2024
12:09:01
I don't think any offer he makes will be accepted.

I expect they have their own agenda.

clocktower
14/10/2024
12:00:11
Frasers need to offer more imo. 1x sales atleast + a bit for the brand name
aishah
14/10/2024
11:58:06
The problem is that the majority shareholder seems to have othher plans, which maybe good for them but not for any other atakeholder.

I think the latest offer is a very good one in light of recent trading etc.

clocktower
11/10/2024
19:02:09
Looks like MA is up for a fight here. 150p indicative and a cleverly-worded presentation of it. Something for the directors in particular to think about over the weekend.
1gw
03/10/2024
16:46:05
So Frasers have put up and went for the clawback as expected.

I look forward to their next move.

clocktower
02/10/2024
15:31:06
I wonder how long it with take Frasers to go for the jugular of Mulberry, as without a doubt in my mind they have and are abusing small shareholders.
clocktower
01/10/2024
09:46:20
It needs to be under the umbrella of one of the major luxury goods brands, that has the firepower to supercharge the brand.

When you consider the shareprice this was trading at years ago, from around 50p in 2004 to around £23/24.00 nine or ten years later, only to sink into huge debts and a current share price of £1.15/1.30.

It is not just the market, it is bad management and poor decision making.

However MA would make a good interim owner, as the majority stakeholder holds everyone over a barrel.

clocktower
01/10/2024
08:24:17
China bounce back should help demand free

D

dennisbergkamp
Chat Pages: 43  42  41  40  39  38  37  36  35  34  33  32  Older

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